- Ansible automates the management of remote systems and controls their desired state. A basic Ansible environment has three main components:Control node
 - A system on which Ansible is installed. You run Ansible commands such as 
ansibleoransible-inventoryon a control node.Managed node - A remote system, or host, that Ansible controls.Inventory
 - A list of managed nodes that are logically organized. You create an inventory on the control node to describe host deployments to Ansible.
 
- Ready to start using Ansible? Complete the following steps to get up and running:
 
- Create an inventory by adding the IP address or fully qualified domain name (FQDN) of one or more remote systems to 
/etc/ansible/hosts. The following example adds the IP addresses of three virtual machines in KVM: 
[myvirtualmachines] 192.0.2.50 192.0.2.51 192.0.2.52
- Verify the hosts in your inventory.
 
ansible all --list-hosts
hosts (1):
  192.0.2.50
  192.0.2.51
  192.0.2.52
Set up SSH connections so Ansible can connect to the managed nodes.
- Add your public SSH key to the 
authorized_keysfile on each remote system. - Test the SSH connections, for example:
 
ssh username@192.0.2.50
If the username on the control node is different on the host, you need to pass the -u option with the ansible command.
Ping the managed nodes.
ansible all -m ping
192.0.2.50 | SUCCESS => {
  "ansible_facts": {
    "discovered_interpreter_python": "/usr/bin/python3"
    },
    "changed": false,
    "ping": "pong"
    }
192.0.2.51 | SUCCESS => {
  "ansible_facts": {
    "discovered_interpreter_python": "/usr/bin/python3"
    },
    "changed": false,
    "ping": "pong"
    }
192.0.2.52 | SUCCESS => {
  "ansible_facts": {
    "discovered_interpreter_python": "/usr/bin/python3"
    },
    "changed": false,
    "ping": "pong"
    }
- Congratulations! You are now using Ansible. Continue by learning how to build an inventory.